Many people start criticizing market manipulators when the market crashes, and when it surges, they shout about faith recharging. Honestly, this way of thinking is too one-sided. The major fluctuations in the crypto market are not driven by a few whales or manipulators, but by the "macro expectation gap" secretly influencing capital flows.
Think about whether you've experienced this situation: seeing a piece of good news, you rush to enter the market, only to find that the price not only fails to rise but actually falls back. This is called "anticipation of expectations being realized early." The market has already digested the expectation that "good news is coming soon," so when the good news actually arrives, it fails to break through the market's originally aggressive expectations, ultimately becoming a selling point. This is also why seasoned traders often say "buy the rumor, sell the fact"—the core idea is to seize the difference between expectations and reality.
So how exactly does the macro expectation gap influence the market? There are three key mechanisms to understand:
**First is the shift in capital flow direction.** Once macro expectations deviate, the market's risk appetite immediately adjusts. For example, if regulatory expectations suddenly heat up, traditional financial sector funds may accelerate withdrawals and seek hedges in the crypto market. At this time, DeFi-related tokens often benefit first, and the hot spots between sectors switch rapidly. The reverse is also true—if the macro situation shifts to a more relaxed stance, risk assets may rotate into other sectors.
Capital always chases the least uncertain profit opportunities, and the expectation gap is precisely where this uncertainty is most concentrated.
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not_your_keys
· 5m ago
That's right. Instead of blaming the market makers, it's better to study the expected deviation—that's the real way to make money.
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potentially_notable
· 17h ago
Well said, it's just that I can't keep up with the expected pace.
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Ser_APY_2000
· 17h ago
That's right. Instead of staring at the market makers, it's better to study the expected difference—this is the real logic behind making money.
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ZKProofEnthusiast
· 17h ago
That's right, the theory of expectation difference has indeed awakened me several times.
Many people start criticizing market manipulators when the market crashes, and when it surges, they shout about faith recharging. Honestly, this way of thinking is too one-sided. The major fluctuations in the crypto market are not driven by a few whales or manipulators, but by the "macro expectation gap" secretly influencing capital flows.
Think about whether you've experienced this situation: seeing a piece of good news, you rush to enter the market, only to find that the price not only fails to rise but actually falls back. This is called "anticipation of expectations being realized early." The market has already digested the expectation that "good news is coming soon," so when the good news actually arrives, it fails to break through the market's originally aggressive expectations, ultimately becoming a selling point. This is also why seasoned traders often say "buy the rumor, sell the fact"—the core idea is to seize the difference between expectations and reality.
So how exactly does the macro expectation gap influence the market? There are three key mechanisms to understand:
**First is the shift in capital flow direction.** Once macro expectations deviate, the market's risk appetite immediately adjusts. For example, if regulatory expectations suddenly heat up, traditional financial sector funds may accelerate withdrawals and seek hedges in the crypto market. At this time, DeFi-related tokens often benefit first, and the hot spots between sectors switch rapidly. The reverse is also true—if the macro situation shifts to a more relaxed stance, risk assets may rotate into other sectors.
Capital always chases the least uncertain profit opportunities, and the expectation gap is precisely where this uncertainty is most concentrated.